Newsweek: At least 30 new monuments to the Confederacy have been built, mostly on private land, since 2000. That estimate may be low.
http://www.newsweek.com/new-confederate-monuments-are-quietly-going-across-us-690798?amp=1
TONIGHT! WE DINE! IN HECK!!!!
Like I should have guessed Pikachu was literally a Pika but I didn't
https://www.theverge.com/2016/3/6/11161708/the-verge-review-of-animals-pika-vs-pikachu-pokemon
"Markets, as we've repeatedly learned over the past century, are terrible mechanisms for improving the safety of products and services. It was true for automobile, food, restaurant, airplane, fire, and financial-instrument safety. The reasons are complicated, but basically, sellers don't compete on safety features because buyers can't efficiently differentiate products based on safety considerations. "
-- Bruce Schneier on Internet of Things security
https://www.schneier.com/blog/archives/2017/10/iot_cybersecuri.html#comments
Nearly one in four troops polled say they have seen examples of white nationalism among their fellow service members, and troops rate it as a larger national security threat than Syria, Iraq and Afghanistan, according to a new Military Times poll.
as someone who lives in NYC, I'm constantly thinking about how a lot of shitty tech follows (white, Silicon Valley) Californian cultural norms. two big examples
1. assumption that you will always be outside and in a place with a good network connection. this renders a huge number of mobile apps unusable on the subway, even when there is no good reason to need to be online
2. driving detection, and the assumption that you both have a car and are using it if you're going fast
How to compress air with no moving parts: http://www.coppercountryexplorer.com/2011/07/the-taylor-compressor/
@clhendricksbc If you haven't done a credit freeze, that is also something to consider: https://krebsonsecurity.com/2015/06/how-i-learned-to-stop-worrying-and-embrace-the-security-freeze/
@Elizafox they got to it eventually at least...
This is pretty accurate to what I've heard in Evangelical churches, btw. (and never really agreed with)
It goes to show that what look like abstract, ethereal theological disputes actually have very down-to-earth and lived results.
Premillarianism, in hindsight, appears to have been one of those Terribly Bad Ideas that future historians will write books about.
@Elizafox And yet the guy's still not fired as far as I know :(
Data Scientist in the bay. Tennis player (4.5). D&D, Gloomhaven, and board game enthusiast. Pronouns he/him.